Hippocampus-dependent retrieval and hippocampus-independent extinction of place avoidance navigation, and stress-induced out-of-context activation of a memory revealed by reversible lesion experiments in rats
Language English Country Czech Republic Media print
Document type Journal Article
PubMed
12479785
Knihovny.cz E-resources
- MeSH
- Maze Learning physiology MeSH
- Dominance, Cerebral MeSH
- Extinction, Psychological physiology MeSH
- Stress, Physiological physiopathology psychology MeSH
- Hippocampus drug effects physiology MeSH
- Rats MeSH
- Swimming psychology MeSH
- Rats, Long-Evans MeSH
- Mental Recall physiology MeSH
- Tetrodotoxin pharmacology MeSH
- Avoidance Learning physiology MeSH
- Space Perception physiology MeSH
- Animals MeSH
- Check Tag
- Rats MeSH
- Male MeSH
- Animals MeSH
- Publication type
- Journal Article MeSH
- Names of Substances
- Tetrodotoxin MeSH
The use of reversible lesion techniques in memory research was pioneered in the laboratory of Jan Bures and Olga Buresova. We use the occasion of Jan's 75th birthday to briefly review the experimental utility of this approach. Two experiments from our current research are reported in which reversible lesioning methods are used to ask otherwise experimentally untenable questions about memory retrieval. The first experiment used intra-hippocampal injections of tetrodotoxin to temporarily inactivate the hippocampus during retrieval of a well-learned place avoidance navigation memory. This revealed that the hippocampus is necessary for place avoidance retrieval but that the extinction of place avoidance can occur independently of retrieving the memory and intact hippocampal function. The second experiment used KCl-induced cortical spreading depression in an interhippocampal transfer paradigm to demonstrate that a Y-maze memory that is learned by only one cortical hemisphere can be made to transfer to the other hemisphere by forcing the rat to swim, a unique stressful experience that occurred in a different apparatus, different behavioral context, and involved different behaviors than the Y-maze training. This demonstrates, we believe for the first time behaviorally, that memories can be activated outside of the behavioral context of their acquisition and expression in rats.
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